
Condensed matter physics is the branch of physics that studies systems of very large numbers of particles in a condensed state, like solids or liquids. Condensed matter physics wants to answer questions like: why is a material magnetic? Or why is it insulating or conducting? Or new, exciting questions like: what materials are good to make a reliable quantum computer? Can we describe gravity as the behavior of a material? The behavior of a system with many particles is very different from that of its individual particles. We say that the laws of many body physics are emergent or collective. Emergence explains the beauty of physics laws.
Format results
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SYK criticality and correlated metals
Subir Sachdev Harvard University
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Seminar: Engineering quantum spin models with atoms and light
Monika Schleier-Smith Stanford University
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Quantum Phases of Matter and Entanglement Basics
John McGreevy University of California, San Diego
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Welcome and Opening Remarks
Michael Hermele University of Colorado Boulder
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Temperature enhancement of thermal Hall conductance quantization
David Mross Weizmann Institute of Science
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Physical footprints of intrinsic sign problems
Zohar Ringel Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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Controlled access to the low-energy physics of critical Fermi surfaces
Ipsita Mandal Shiv Nadar University
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Emergent criticality in non-unitary random dynamics
Xiao Chen Boston College
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Engineering and measuring higher-order topology
Kirill Piekhanov Universität Basel
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Reinforcement Learning assisted Quantum Optimization
Matteo Wauters SISSA International School for Advanced Studies
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Magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene at charge neutrality: interactions and disorder
Alex Thomson California Institute of Technology